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Love, Freedom, and Aloneness

Love, Freedom, and Aloneness
The Koan of Relationships
Book — Also available in other formats: eBook

The ultimate guide to relating in the 21st century, this book is for those who are looking for something more real than the traditional, "till death do us part" platitudes.

Always mindful of the anti-sex, anti-life teachings of religions and educational institutions, the book responds to dozens of gritty, essential questions about a wide range of relationship issues.
Chapter Titles
    Preface
    #PART ONE: Love
    # One: Lovey – Dovey
    # Two: Real and Unreal – the First Step
    # Three: The Virtues of Selfishness
    # Four: Attached to Nothing
    #PART TWO: From Relationship to Relating
 


Details
Osho cuts through the nonsense of our relationship dramas and shows how we can be in love and yet free, together and yet able to take our own space when we need it.

Continued from above....
Where does jealousy come from, and how can we free ourselves from it?
Is it really possible to be in a relationship and still have a life outside of the "we" identity?
What are the real differences between men and women and how they view relationships, versus the differences that we’ve just been conditioned to have?

Excerpt from: Love - Freedom - Aloneness, Chapter The Koan of Relationship


"A relationship is a puzzle with no clue to it. Howsoever you try to manage it, you will never be able to manage it. Nobody has ever been able to manage it. It is made in such a way that it simply remains puzzling. The more you try to demystify it, the more mysterious it becomes. The more you try to understand it, the more elusive it is. It is a greater koan than any koan that Zen masters give to their disciples, because their koans are meditative – one is alone. When you are given the koan of relationship it is far more complicated, because you are two – differently made, differently conditioned, polar opposites to each other, pulling in different directions, manipulating each other, trying to possess, dominate… there are a thousand and one problems.

"While meditating, the only problem is how to be silent, how not to be caught in thoughts. In relationship there are a thousand and one problems. If you are silent, there is a problem. Just sit silently by the side of your wife and you will see – she will immediately jump upon you: "Why are you silent? What do you mean?"Or speak, and you will be in trouble – whatsoever you say, you are always misunderstood.

"No relationship can ever come to a point where it is not a problem. Or if sometimes you see a relationship coming to a point where it is no longer a problem, that simply means it is not a relationship anymore. The relationship has disappeared – the fighters are tired, they have started accepting things as they are. They are bored; they don’t want to fight any more. They have accepted it, they don’t want to improve upon it.

"Or, in the past, people tried to create a kind of harmony forcibly. That’s why, down the ages, women were repressed – that was one way of sorting things out. Just force the woman to follow the man, then there is no problem. But it is not a relationship either. When the woman is no longer an independent person the problem disappears – but the woman has also disappeared. Then she is just a thing to be used; then there is no joy, and the man starts looking for some other woman. If you ever come across a happy marriage, don’t trust it on the surface. Just go a little deeper and you will be surprised. I have heard about one happy marriage…

"A hillbilly farmer decided it was time to get married, so he saddled his mule and set off for the city to find a wife. In time, he met a woman and they were married. So they both climbed up on the mule and started back for the farm. After a while, the mule balked and refused to move. The farmer got down, found a big stick, and beat the mule until it again began to move.A few miles later, the mule balked again, and the entire scene was repeated. After the beating, when the mule was moving again, the farmer said, ‘That’s twice’
A few miles later, the mule balked for a third time. The farmer got down, got his wife down, and then took out a pistol and shot the mule in the eye, killing it instantly.
‘That was a stupid thing to do!’the wife shouted. ‘That was a valuable animal and just because he annoyed you, you killed him! That was stupid, criminal…’ and she went on like this for some time. As she stopped for breath, the farmer said, ’That’s once.‘

"And it is said, after that they lived forever in married happiness!

"That is one way of solving things, that’s how it has been done in the past. In the future, the reverse is going to be tried – the husband has to follow the wife. But it is the same thing.

"A relationship is a koan. And unless you have solved a more fundamental thing about yourself, you cannot solve it. The problem of love can be solved only when the problem of meditation has been solved, not before it. Because it is really two non-meditative persons who are creating the problem. Two persons who are in confusion, who don’t know who they are – naturally they multiply each other’s confusion, they magnify it…." Osho
From Publisher’s Weekly

The first few chapters of self-styled guru Osho’s spiritual insights on love, sex and meditation are infused with an idiosyncratic but reasonably mainstream flavor. As the book progresses, however, Osho’s teachings veer sharply away from conventional spirituality. In a chapter entitled "It Takes a Village," Osho envisions a future in which communes replace the family, calling this "the most revolutionary step in human history."

...Given the author’s identity, readers might be tempted to dismiss these teachings as cult brainwashing and avoid them altogether, but there is much here to be taken seriously.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

These thoughts on love, sex, marriage, relationships, freedom, and enlightenment come from transcripts of the late teacher’s lectures and question-and-answer sessions, and their casual, conversational tone makes them easy to read. Osho stresses the need for self-love, the effect of meditation on one’s ability to love, the origins of jealousy, the social conditioning that shapes one’s relationships, the reasons relationships often fail, and the difference between love and lust. He makes his points emphatically, often using humor to illustrate his thoughts. "I teach self-love," he says. "But remember, self-love does not mean egotistical pride, not at all. In fact it means just the opposite. The person who loves himself finds that there is no self in him. Love always melts the self - that is one of the alchemical secrets to be learned, understood, experienced." Regardless of one’s feelings about Osho, who was controversial as a "sex guru," there is plenty of food for thought in his musings. - Bonnie Johnston
Copyright – American Library Association. All rights reserved

Booklist is the magazine the New York Times calls "an acquisitions bible for public and school librarians nationwide," is the review journal of the American Library Association. It recommends works of fiction, nonfiction, children’s books, reference books, and media to its 30,000 institutional and personal subscribers.


Details
More Information
Type    Compilations
Publisher    St. Martins Press, USA
ISBN-13    312291620
Dimensions (size)    209 x 281 mm
Number of Pages    240

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Average: 4.7 (3 votes)